تعبير تقرير برجراف فقرة برزنتيشن بحث موضوع ملخص جاهز باللغة الانجليزي  كتابة انشاء عبارات حكم اقوال تعبير بالانجليزي عن. تقرير جاهز سهل بسيط قطعة معلومات بسيطة مبسط نبذة عن الاقتصاد السكان تعبير عن بلادي اسم كلمة معنى كيف تكتب
information about  معلومات عن جمهورية دولة حول  تكاليف المعيشه السياحة في
 للطلاب عرض
تعبير عن تونس بالانجليزي
tunisia tourism
paragraph about tourism in tunisia
تونس الوجهات نقاط الاهتمام
hammamet
paragraph about tourism in tunisia
tourism in djerba english
tourism tunisia welcome
touristic places in tunisia
paragraph about tunisia
visit tunisia
beautiful tunisia
short paragraph about tourism

welcome to tunisia leaflet



Tunisia is located in North Africa. The country is divided into 24 governorates and shares borders with Algeria in the west and Libya in the east.
2012 data
GDP per capita: $ 4,237 per year.
GDP growth rate: 3.6%
Annual inflation rate: 5.7%
(In% of GDP)
Budget balance: - 6.6%
Current balance: - 8.2%
External debt: 44%
Commercial balance: - $ 4,863,349,592
Exchange rate stability: sharp depreciation of the Tunisian dinar in 2013
The breakdown of the three main sectors of activity in GDP (2012) is as follows:
 Agriculture: 8.9%
 Industry: 29.6%
 Services: 61.5%
Weight of the country in international institutions:
Tunisia joined the United Nations (United Nations) on 12 November 1956. [7] It is notably part of the WTO (World Trade Organization), the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency), the IOC (International Olympic Committee), the OIC (Organization of the Islamic Conference), the AfDB ( African Development Bank) or the UMA (Arab Maghreb Union).
Technologies and innovations:
In 2009, 1.10% of Tunisia's GDP was spent in the area of ​​research and development. In 2011, 6% of manufactured goods exports are high tech, [8] which represents just over $ 732 million.
Media and cultural recognition:
Tunisia no longer enjoys the influence that was hers when she bore the name of Carthage in antiquity. The tourism sector has flourished before the revolution and is struggling to restart. Nevertheless, the overthrow of the Ben Ali dictatorship (2011) has provoked a certain enthusiasm among Western countries committed to democratic values. Tunisia enjoys good relations also with its close or distant Arab neighbors (Libya, Palestinians, Qatar). Relations are tense with the Syrian power of Bashar El-Assad, Tunisia supporting the rebels in this civil war.
Vectors of influences:
The recovery of tourism can restore the Tunisian economy and the prestige of Tunisia. The Union for the Arab Maghreb (AMU) can also be one of the reasons for regional satisfaction if it manages to be relaunched.
NGO:
Nearly thirty NGOs are registered in Tunisia. [9] These include AFD (French Development Agency), Citizenship Pending, the International Committee of the Red Cross, GRET, Child's Voice, and Southern Health.
VI. General conclusion
In North Africa, Tunisia is recovering without too much economic consequences of a serious political crisis. GDP is already rising (3%), while the tourism sector, flagship of the Tunisian economy before the revolution, is still dependent on the consequences of the revolution. [10] The deterioration of security in the country has led to a decline in tourism that is difficult to rebound otherwise than with the passing of peaceful years, in the hope of reassuring customers of the sector. In the same way, the ethnic homogeneity of the population, almost exclusively Arab, the good level of education of the population, the good economic relation with the EU (European Union) and that with the Arab countries, are all necessary assets to counteract glaring weaknesses; such as a high unemployment rate (18%), especially among young people (40%), and a contestation of it (clashes between pro and anti Ennahda), a trade balance and a deficit budget, as well as a precarious exchange rate and instability of power.
The power is marked by an instability peculiar to the effervescence of the overthrow of a long dictatorship - 24 years - that many observers, and among the most knowledgeable of the region, thought irremovable. Ben Ali exiled, the end of nepotism, clientelism and fierce repression leaves room for a new configuration of actors where everyone wants to play his new chance thoroughly. The former Islamist opponents, strongly repressed under the old regime, managed to reach the executive power of the new Tunisian Republic by trimming, or hiding, their appetites for Sharia. Part of the population is outraged by the political conduct of the Islamist party and the liquidation of opponents (Chokri Belaid, Mohamed Brahmi) that it seems to be driving under the hands. The discovery of a large oil reserve (1 billion barrels of oil) on the Tunisian territory will come from balm to the heart to the economy of Tunis, while the crucial stakes will remain the integration of young people in the economic sector and maintaining growth.

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